This blog by Spencer Jardine endeavors to focus on information-literacy topics. Please share your own comments on needing, finding, evaluating, and using information. Thank you for visiting my site. If you have any ideas on future blog posts, let me know.

Monday, April 1, 2013

The Association of College &
Research Libraries (ACRL) defines information literacy as “a set of abilities
requiring individuals to ‘recognize when information is needed and have the
ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information.’”[1]Over the last decade the Oboler Library has
advocated for and educated individuals across the ISU
campus about information literacy.ISU
librarians used to teach a two-credit library research course that helped
students earn a certificate as media specialists or school librarians.The College of
Education sponsored this certification program; however, with the
retirement of one of the professors in that college, the program died.

Since that time, librarians have
promoted information literacy in workshops and presentations.Library representatives on campus committees
have also explained and advocated the importance of information literacy in
today’s information-rich society.The
foundation they laid prepared faculty for the course proposals put forth in
recent years.Therefore, Curriculum Council accepted a
proposal in Fall 2011 to create a one-credit course titled LLIB/ACAD 1115:
Information Research.This change first
appeared in ISU’s Undergraduate Catalog:
2012-2013.However, students first
enrolled in the course during the Fall 2011 and Spring 2012 semesters, taking
it as an experimental course.The Student Success Center assisted the
Library to ensure the class appeared on the class schedule that first year, and
the course was cross-listed as an ACAD and LLIB course with the experimental
number designation 1199.

Initially, the class met twice a
week during the second block of eight-week classes.This changed in Fall 2012, and the students
attended class once a week for sixteen weeks.It seems that student success increased with these changes due to the
fact that the work spread out over a longer period, rather than loaded into
eight weeks when students tend to be the busiest at the end of the semester.

LLIB/ACAD 1115 seeks to help
students accomplish the following objectives:

Identify sources of academic, popular, and professional research

Show evidence that you can select relevant and credible sources in
support of a research question

Demonstrate an ability to distinguish between primary and
secondary sources

Assignments every two weeks require
that students find a specific type of source, like a reference article, a book,
a scholarly article, a newspaper article, etc.They must explain how they found the source, summarize it, and evaluate its
credibility.Completion of these assignments
prepares them to create an annotated bibliography, which is the final project
of the course.In-class activities also
get students on track to complete the bi-weekly assignments.Students who have completed the course often
say that this course should be required for all students or that they wished
they had taken the course as freshmen, because it would have been very helpful.

Library faculty believed this course
would be beneficial for all students.Consequently, they put forth a proposal to change the course to a
three-credit course and for the course to be considered as an option to fulfill
a general education requirement for undergraduate students.In recent years the General Education
Requirements Committee (GERC) had drafted a revision of the requirements (www.isu.edu/gened), and information literacy appeared as one
of the new objectives.Beginning in Fall
2013, incoming students must meet either the critical thinking or information
literacy objective.LLIB 1115:
Introduction to Information Research will be a course that fulfills the information
literacy objective, since the Curriculum Council and GERC both approved the
necessary proposals.

LLIB 1115: Introduction to
Information Research will be taught in Fall 2013 as a three-credit course with
the following objectives:

Determine the nature and
extent of information needed

Access the needed
information effectively and efficiently

Evaluate information and its
sources critically

Incorporate selected
information into one’s knowledge base and value system

Use information effectively
to accomplish a specific purpose

Understand the economic,
legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information, and access
and use information ethically and legally

Currently,
the Library plans to teach five sections of LLIB 1115 with one section being
taught entirely online in an asynchronous format where students will complete
assignments independently and view course materials and recorded presentations
online.The other four sections will
meet on the Pocatello campus in computer laboratories to accommodate the
hands-on nature of the course instruction and assignments.Oboler Library faculty look forward to this
new endeavor and are working to make this course a valuable one that will
contribute to future student success.